Around the time I turned 12, I figured out exactly what I wanted to be when I grew up: an alcoholic.

I didn't actually know what it meant to be an alcoholic, but I knew that one day, I would drink copious amounts and dash around the streets of Paris, preferably in the company of bullfighters, bankrupts, impotent newspaper correspondents, and morbidly depressed, exotically beautiful divorcees.

In short, my childhood was turned upside down by a book that I'd discovered a little too early — one that effectively changed the course of the rest of my life. It's a fantastic book — perhaps the most perfectly written novel written in the past century — but it's not really a book for a 12-year-old.

Here's what happened. From early on, I was obsessed with television. Really bad TV, actually, shows like Three's Company. My parents, fearing the worst, set a rule in the house that I had to read two books a week before I could get back to my true love — wonderfully pixelated trash.

And so, somewhere around my 12th birthday, I stumbled on Hemingway's masterpiece, and suddenly found myself obsessed with these drunk writers pirouetting around Paris.

On its surface, the book is simple. It's the story of the wounded ex-pat journalist, Jake Barnes, and his unconsummated love for the divorced and fabulous Lady Brett Ashley. Jake is hampered by two rivals — Robert Cohn and the jovial, drunken bankrupt Mike Campbell.

Somewhere along the journey, as the not-so-merry crew traveled from Paris to Pamplona to watch the bullfights, something inside of me flickered alive.

At that age, I certainly didn't know what was wrong with Jake and why he couldn't marry Brett (I'm still not entirely sure I know what was wrong with Jake and why he couldn't marry Brett) — but I worshipped him. I'd never been drunk, but I wanted to be; I wanted to file cables and go out all night drinking with expat degenerates. I wanted to sit at a cafe, eat hard-boiled eggs and drink wine from a skin.

As I grew older, I only became more obsessed with the book. By the time I graduated from college, I was rereading it on the first day of every month.

Instead of becoming an alcoholic, I became a writer. And then the first thing I did when I sold my book was travel to Paris and try to have a drink at every bar that Jake drinks in.

It turns out, it is nearly impossible to drink that much, and certainly one should never attempt it in the order described in the novel. I'm not sure how I made it back to my hotel that first night, but I know I couldn't leave my room again for two days.

True to the narrative, the second thing I did was almost go bankrupt — much like Mike Campbell — gradually, and then suddenly. But I was so swept up in the tragic glamour of that simple novel from my childhood that even this setback seemed romantic.

And so, nearly a million dollars in debt at 28, still with the taste of Paris on my lips, I knew that I'd found my true calling — all because of a damn, dangerous book. One that I still try to read, once a month, whether I need it or not.

PG-13 is produced and edited by Ellen Silva and Rose Friedman with production assistance from Gavin Bade.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Now, it's time for our regular book series. We call it PG-13 because that's about when teenage readers start to explore the adult world, even if they know they're not quite ready.

When author Ben Mezrich was that age, he discovered Ernest Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises." He has this essay explaining how a book he read as a teenager was still leading him on adventures years later.

BEN MEZRICH, BYLINE: Around the time I turned 12, I figured out exactly what I wanted to be when I grew up - an alcoholic. I didn't actually know what it meant to be an alcoholic, but I knew one day, I would drink copious amounts and dash around the streets of Paris. Hopefully, I'd be in the company of bullfighters and bankrupts, impotent newspaper correspondents and exotically beautiful divorcees.

Basically, my childhood was turned upside down by a book that I discovered a little too early. "The Sun Also Rises" by Ernest Hemingway is a fantastic read, but it's not really right for a 12-year-old.

Here's what happened. From early on, I was obsessed with television, really bad TV, shows like "Three's Company" and "Charlie's Angels." My parents set a rule in the house that I had to read two books a week before I could get back to my pixilated garbage. And so, somewhere around my 12th birthday, I stumbled on Hemingway's masterpiece and, suddenly, I was obsessed with these drunk writers pirouetting around Paris.

On its surface, the book is simple. It's the story of the wounded ex-pat journalist, Jake Barnes, and his unconsummated love for the divorced and fabulous Lady Brett Ashely. There's also Jake's rivals, Robert Cohn and the bankrupt Mike Campbell, but underneath, it's a dark romance about lost and decaying souls that somehow manages to be full of life.

Somewhere along the journey, as the not-so-merry crew traveled from Paris to Pamplona, something inside of me flickered alive. At that age, I didn't know what was wrong with Jake and why he couldn't marry Brett. Actually, I'm still not entirely sure I know what was wrong with Jake and why he couldn't marry Brett, but I worshipped him. I'd never been drunk, but I wanted to be. I wanted to file cables, sit at cafes and eat hardboiled eggs.

Well, I didn't become an alcoholic, but like Jake, I became a writer and then the first thing I did when I sold my book was travel to Paris and try to have a drink in every bar that Jake does. It turns out, this is nearly impossible and so, safely back home, but still with the taste of Paris on my lips, I knew that the life of a writer was for me, but I could leave the excess where it belonged, back in the city that Hemingway wrote so well.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIEGEL: Ben Mezrich's latest book is called "Sex on the Moon." He recommended "The Sun Also Rises" by Ernest Hemingway. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.